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Students at a California high school were forced to hunker down as SWAT teams with weapons drawn searched their entire campus for weapons. The effort included a warrantless search of students’ vehicles, lockers, backpacks, and classrooms. The long 4-hour detention reportedly forced some students to urinate in darkened classrooms.
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The security frenzy took place on Thursday, May 29th, 2014, at Dana Hills High School in Dana Point, California.
The dramatic measures were not taken because of a threat, nor an act of violence, nor a crime being committed. Someone found a carrying case for a firearm in the parking lot — a perfectly legal object that millions of Americans possess.
Panicky school administrators summoned the Orange County Sheriff’s Department around 11:45 a.m. — just before lunch. Students were immediately locked down and forced to stay detained in their classrooms.
Dozens of officers arrived and brought their $250,000 armored Lenco Bearcat vehicle. Deputies could be seen suiting up for battle before entering the school.
For four long hours, the entire school was searched from top to bottom. Students were forced to stay in place for the duration.
“My son is texting me from inside. He’s saying that he’s fine and they’re barricaded in a room,” one parent told KCBS during the prolonged incident.
SWAT cops meticulously moved through the school, searching lockers, backpacks, parked cars, and classrooms. Several photos show them with weapons shouldered as cops maneuvered through the hallways.
Reportedly, as the LagunaNiguel-DanaPoint Patch wrote, desks were being converted into urinals to accommodate students who were not allowed to leave the classroom to use the bathroom.
Dozens of concerned parents flocked to the school in hopes of picking up their children, some of whom were communicating via text message with people outside the campus. Some parents told KCAL9 the students’ backpacks were being searched, and some students were being held in darkened rooms.
One parent, Stephanie Andrews, told the station that according to her son, some students were urinating in classroom sinks because they were not being allowed out of their classrooms.
“It is scary to them to see guard dogs and SWAT team members going up and down their school and just in light of recent incidences, not knowing what could happen — it’s very scary to them,” she said.
The lockdown/detention was not lifted until 4:00 p.m. Hungry, exhausted students poured out of their classrooms to seek bathrooms and food.
No weapon was found. No suspect was arrested. No threats were ever made. No crime was committed. No one was in any danger whatsoever — except from having their rights violated and safety jeopardized by overzealous, paramilitary cops.
Delivered by The Daily Sheeple
Contributed by Eric Peters of Eric Peters Autos.
Eric Peters is an automotive columnist and author who has written for the Detroit News and Free Press, Investors Business Daily, The American Spectator, National Review, The Chicago Tribune and Wall Street Journal. His books include Road Hogs (2011) and Automotive Atrocities (2004). His next book, “The Politics of Driving,” is scheduled for release in 2012. Visit his web site at Eric Peters Autos.
What?!!! No flash-bangs thrown in every room?!!!
No crazed student armed with a plastic spoon charging 6 machine gun armed men?!!!
No skirmish line walking down the hall shooting anything that moved for “Officer Safety?”
I have to say the kids got off lucky… THIS time.
NEXT TIME though…God help you if one of you sneezes, farts, burps or whines.